Introduction Rickets, growth failure, and recurrent periapical abscesses with fistulae are main signs in patients with X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets (XLH). Prevalence of abscesses, pulp chamber features, biochemical findings, disease severity, and PHEX gene mutation were examined. Materials and methods Pulp chambers size, shape, and morphology were assessed by orthopantomography in XLH patients (n = 24, age 5.8 ± 1.6 years) and in sex and age-matched healthy controls (n = 23, age 6.2 ± 1.4 years). XLH patients received conventional treatment (3.5 ± 1.9 years). Pulp chamber features were assessed in teeth of primary dentition and in the permanent left mandibular first molar and compared with those of controls. Rickets severity score was assessed at wrist, knee, and ankle. Results The mean pulp chamber area/tooth area ratio, mean pulp chamber height/pulp chamber width ratio, and prominence of pulp horns into the tooth crown in primary and secondary molars were significantly higher in patients than in controls and in patients suffered abscesses than in patients without abscesses. Sixteen patients (67%) had a history of abscesses; incisors were affected more than canines and molars. Severity of rickets and mean serum parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels were significantly higher, and mean serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH) 2 D] levels significantly lower in patients suffered abscesses than in patients without abscesses. PHEX gene mutations were not correlated with dental phenotype and disease severity. Conclusion Enlarged pulp chambers with altered shape and morphology affected the majority of XLH patients predisposing to recurrent periapical abscesses with fistulae. Dental phenotype was associated with severity of rickets, high serum PTH, and low serum 1,25(OH) 2 D levels.
Bronchiectasis in children, although occurring with diminished frequency, continues as a major challenge for the pediatric pulmonologist. The method of choice for the diagnosis of the condition is high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT). The aim of the present study was to correlate the relationship(s) of HRCT, lung function, ventilation lung scintigraphy (VLS), and perfusion lung scintigraphy (PLS) in children with bronchiectasis. Sixteen children ranging in age from 4-18 years with clinical and chest X-ray evidence of bronchiectasis were enrolled in the study. The degree of bronchiectasis was assessed by HRCT scores, decrease in attenuation on expiratory scans, VLS, and PLS. HRCT scores for bronchiectasis and decreased lung attenuation showed a strong correlation with PLS (rho = 0.82; P < 0.001) and with VLS (rho = 0.72; P < 0.01). There was a moderate negative correlation between FEV(1) and HRCT bronchiectasis scores (rho = -0.53; P = 0.02), decreased lung attenuation score (rho = -0.64; P = 0.007), and atelectasis score (rho = -0.54; P = 0.03). In conclusion, HRCT provides a complete and precise assessment of children with bronchiectasis. Ventilation/perfusion scans and lung functions are additive tools to understand the complexity of the disease process and to improve diagnosis and therapeutic strategies.
To compare the diagnostic performance of high-frequency ultrasound (HFU) as a first- or second-line diagnostic tool in non-palpable lesions (NPL) of the breast and to define the place of HFU in the diagnostic process, 89 women with this kind of lesion, previously detected by mammography, underwent HFU with 7.5-13 MHz transducers. The examinations were performed by two equally experienced operators of which only one (operator I) was aware of the mammographic findings. The mammographic examinations revealed the following non-palpable lesions: asymmetry-hyperdensity (17 cases), nodule (44 cases), stellate lesion (5 cases), microcalcifications (23 cases). Total sensitivity of HFU in the examinations performed by operator I was 83 %, while in the examinations performed by operator II (unaware of the mammographic findings) it was only 35 %. In all cases HFU allowed the operators to determine the basic features of the lesions. Our experience confirms that ultrasonography, even if performed with high frequency, cannot be proposed as a screening examination but may profitably be employed as a second-step technique to characterize NPL previously identified by mammography. This 'second-step' role can do the following: rule out true pathology (cases of false-positive mammography findings); furnish some basic features in the case of focal lesions; show other findings in the case of microcalcifications, such as microcysts, 'filled duct' appearance, parenchymal inhomogeneities and nodules; guide interventional procedures; and localize lesions preoperatively.
CT revealed the presence of epidural emphysema as an incidental finding in a 13-year-old boy in whom mild infrequent coughing during an asthmatic attack resulted in a pneumomediastinum and subcutaneous emphysema. Epidural emphysema was not associated with neurological symptoms. The CT images demonstrated the pathway of air leakage from the posterior mediastinum through the intervertebral foramina into the epidural space. Repeat CT showed spontaneous resolution of the epidural emphysema.
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